About

Optical fibres lie at the very heart of modern society, providing the information superhighways required within our global communication systems. The first demonstrations of light guidance within an optical fibre took place in the early 1960’s, yet as the result of much ingenuity and sustained funding by the telecommunications industry, within little over 30 years the transmission capacity of a single fibre has been increased from just the few Kbit/s required for a single telephone link to over 10Tbit/s – sufficient bandwidth to support more than 250 million simultaneous telephone conversations, or more than 100,000 broadband connections operating at 10Mbit/s.

The development of low loss fibre and the erbium doped fibre amplifier, (both pioneered at Southampton), has seen the elimination of attenuation as the primary limitation to transmission, allowing high-capacity data transfer over transcontinental distances.

Research into fibre technology has been a critical enabler to the past development of communication systems, and continued effort will be required to develop the core, metro and access networks of the future needed to deliver exciting new high bandwidth applications such as high-definition TV, interactive gaming, and video-on-demand directly via fibre to the subscriber premises. There has clearly been a massive investment in optical fibre telecommunications technology over the years. Major breakthroughs have been made in manufacturing processes, as well as in both component and system concepts and there is now a growing worldwide interest in exploring how different aspects of this exciting technology can be used in other areas of major scientific and industrial significance.

The role of the AFTA group is to develop the fibres, fibre devices, and system concepts required for next generation telecommunication systems, and to investigate new applications of the technology in areas beyond telecommunications including amongst others: high power lasers, industrial materials processing, aerospace, biology, sensing and fundamental physics.

For example, we study techniques to make fibres that are 1,000 times thinner than telecommunications fibres which can be used to probe inside cells with obvious applications in biology and medicine. We look at applying fabrication and device concepts proven in silica to new materials allowing extensions of these devices to new wavelength ranges such as the mid-IR where many molecules have characteristic absorption signatures with applications in sensing and chemistry. At even more extreme wavelength scales we are hoping to exploit the high-power laser pulses that we can generate in the near-IR using fibres lasers to realise new sources of X-rays for imaging single molecules. 

People, projects, publications and PhDs

People

Dr Ali Shakiba

Research Fellow

Research interests

  • Hollow Core Optical Fibre
  • Mathematical and Numerical Modeling
  • Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer Analysis
Connect with Ali

Professor Francesco Poletti

Professor

Research interests

  • Hollow Core Optical Fibres: design and fabrication
  • Optical Communications: high capacity and low latency
  • Novel active and passive optical fibres

Accepting applications from PhD students

Connect with Francesco

Mr Gianluca Guerra

Research Fellow
Connect with Gianluca

Dr Gregory Jasion

Principal Research Fellow

Research interests

  • Hollow core optical fibre
  • Fibre draw modelling
  • Multiphase flow
Connect with Gregory

Dr Hans Christian Mulvad

Senior Research Fellow – ORC advanced

Research interests

  • Hollow core fiber technology
  • Hollow core fibers for ultra-high power delivery
Connect with Hans Christian

Dr Ian Davidson

Senior Research Fellow – ORC advanced

Research interests

  • Fabrication, characterisation, and usage of novel micro-structured (predominantly hollow-core…
Connect with Ian

Dr Kyle Bottrill

Senior Research Fellow – ORC advanced

Research interests

  • Optical technologies
  • Wideband transmission on a hollow-core fiber
Connect with Kyle

Dr Lin Xu

Associate Professor

Research interests

  • Mode-locked fibre lasers (Ytterbium & Thulium fibre systems); 
  • Nonlinear fibre amplifiers for ultrashort pulses; 
  • Mid-infrared fibre lasers (Optical parametric devices); 

Accepting applications from PhD students

Connect with Lin

Dr Massimiliano Guasoni

Principal Research Fellow

Research interests

  • Nonlinear optics
  • Fiber optical amplifiers and oscillators
  • Integrated photonics

Accepting applications from PhD students

Connect with Massimiliano